A robot walks into a bar, helps make a cocktail
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[June 06, 2020]
SEOUL (Reuters) - One robot makes
cocktails from 25 bottles hanging upside-down from the ceiling, another
carves perfect ice balls in the fraction of the time it takes a human
with a knife and an ice pick.
Robo-bartenders are shaking up South Korea's cafe and bar culture as the
country transitions from intensive social distancing to what the
government calls "distancing in daily life".
And they look snazzy doing it too.
In a tailored vest and bow tie, six-foot-tall Cabo narrates his actions
as he carves ice for a whisky on the rocks behind the bar at Coffee Bar
K in Seoul.
"Do you see this? A beautiful ice ball has been made. Enjoy some cold
whisky," he says in Korean.
Cabo made his debut in 2017, but his presence is particularly reassuring
now as the bar looks to encourage customers to return to entertainment
facilities after the coronavirus outbreak.
"Since this space is usually filled with people, customers tend to feel
very anxious," said Choi Won-woo, a human bartender who assembles the
drinks. "I think they would feel safer if the robot makes and serves the
ice rather than if we were to do it ourselves."
At the Cafe Bot Bot Bot coffee bar, where the robot arm shakes up
mojitos and other cocktails, manager Kim Tae-wan also pointed out that
the 'drink bot' can provide a consistent quality to their mixes that
human bartenders can't.
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An ice carving robot for minimising human contact to avoid the
spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is seen during its
demonstration at a bar in Seoul, South Korea, June 3, 2020.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Customers seemed encouraged by the safety the robots provided,
though one pointed out a critical quality the robo-bartenders
lacked.
"It's a little disappointing that you can't talk to the bartenders,"
said 21-year-old university student Moon Seong-eun.
"One of the good things about going to a bar to drink is that you
can chat to them about the drinks or about my worries."
(Reporting by Hyunyoung Yi, Minwoo Park, Daewoung Kim, Writing by
Minwoo Park and Karishma Singh, Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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